Main Argument

Niskanen begins by showing that bureaucrats maximize personal utility (wages and perks) by maximizing the agency's budget. Actually, he corrects this statement. Instead: bureaucrats maximize objectives defined in terms of the agency's discretionary budget. (The discretionary budget is the difference between the budget Congress gives you and the cost to the agency of producing its output).

Niskanen then argues that legislators have ways to monitor bureaucracies. However, they are costly. Several reasons:

Since oversight is done only by one committee, and members of that committee tend to be there because they care more about an issue than other people do, then members of that committee will be content to let the agency overproduce

Since monitoring is costly but members of congress have limited resources (staff, budget), they prefer to "free ride" and let other members of congress do the oversight.

The result: legislatures will use these mechanisms of control only to the point where their marginal value equals their marginal cost.

Actors and Incentives

For Niskanen, the primary actors are bureaucrats and members of relevant Congressional committees. Bureaucrats seek to maximize income and perks. Committee members maximize reelection odds; since the politicians on the committee are there by choice, they will tend to be interested in an inefficiently large output from agencies under their jurisdiction (so they are willing to give more money than the full Congress would, but they expect it to be used as efficiently as the full Congress would).

Results and Implications

Result of this interaction: bureaucrats want an oversized budget. Their overseers in Congressional committees want an oversized budget (relative to what the Congressional median would want). So you get an equilibrium.

Implication for efficiency: Congress will overconsume its common pool resource (tax dollars), leading to a growing spending deficit.

As a result, we see weak attempts to prevent this behavior, such as administrative law (solves the efficiency problem, not the common pool problem), line-item vetoes (helps the common pool problem), etc.

What is Wikisum? When I was in graduate school several years ago, my friends and I would routinely share our reading notes with one another. Eventually, I dumped them into this site to make them more searchable and accessible. Initially, the site was an editable wiki (like Wikipedia). I found that the only edits came from spambots, though, so I eventually turned off the editing features. It is now a static website. Perhaps someday I can turn editing back on again. We'll see. In the meantime, you can use these summaries to benefit from the efforts of a previous generation of doctoral students.